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Burt's Bees


carriecraig

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carriecraig Enthusiast

Does one exist?


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CeliaCruz Rookie

Good question. I was shopping at Ricky's today and perusing a Burt's Bees display. The "hand salve" appealed to me but when I turned the tin over to check out the ingredients, there was a big honking price tag glued to it which I couldn't remove to save my life. I gave up and bought some Kiss My Face hand lotion instead.

Ursa Major Collaborator

Burt's Bees: Open Original Shared Link

This is a list of products to AVOID: Baby Bee Apricot Baby Oil, Dr. Burt's Rescue Ointment, Carrot Day Creme, Carrot Night Creme, Vit. E Bath & Body Oil, Avocado Hair Treatment, Coconut Foot Creme, Orange Essence Cleansing Creme, Bay Rum Aftershave Balm, Baby Bee Buttermilk Soap, Poison Ivy Soap, Rosemary Mint Shampoo Bar, Citrus Facial Scrub, Baby Bee Shampoo Bar

frenchiemama Collaborator

If you email them they will send you their entire gluten-free list in pdf form.

carriecraig Enthusiast

Great, thank you everyone.

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    • trents
      I would ask for a total IGA test (aka, Immunoglobulin A (IgA) and other names as well) to check for IGA deficiency. That test should always be ordered along with the TTG IGA. If someone is IGA deficient, their individual celiac IGA test scores will be artificially low which can result in false negatives. Make sure you are eating generous amounts of gluten leading up to any testing or diagnostic procedure for celiac disease to ensure validity of the results. 10g of gluten daily for a period of at least 2 weeks is what current guidelines are recommending. That's the amount of gluten found in about 4-6 slices of wheat bread.
    • jlp1999
      There was not a total IGA test done, those were the only two ordered. I would say I was consuming a normal amount of gluten, I am not a huge bread or baked goods eater
    • trents
      Were you consuming generous amounts of gluten in the weeks leading up to the blood draw for the antibody testing? And was there a Total IGA test done to test for IGA deficiency?
    • jlp1999
      Thank you for the reply. It was the TTG IGA that was within normal limits
    • trents
      Welcome to the forum, @jlp1999! Which IGA test do you refer to as being normal? TTG-IGA? Total IGA? DGP-IGA? Yes, any positive on an IGA or an IGG test can be due to something other than celiac disease and this is especially true of weak positives. Villous atrophy can also be cause by other things besides celiac disease such as some medications, parasitic infections and even some foods (especially dairy from an intolerance to the dairy protein casein). But the likelihood of that being the case is much less than it being caused by celiac disease.
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